pecan disease management
TRANSCRIPT
Pecan Disease Management2016 Beginner’s Pecan Production Course
Jason BrockDept. of Plant Pathology
University of Georgia – Tifton
Pecan Diseases
• Bacterial leaf spot• Downy spot• Zonate leaf spot• Downy spot• Powdery mildew• Anthracnose
• Phytophthora shuck rot• Nematodes• Bunch disease• Crown gall• Scab• Many other minor diseases
Pecan Diseases
• Bacterial leaf spot• Downy spot• Zonate leaf spot• Downy spot• Powdery mildew• Anthracnose
• Phytophthora shuck rot• Nematodes• Bunch disease• Crown gall• Scab• Many other minor diseases
Pecan Scan
• Caused by the fungus Fusicladium effusum
• a known problem since 1888
• the driving force in pecan disease management
Pecan Scan
Overwinters on tissue infected in
previous years
Pecan Scan
• Temperature range: 50‐95 ˚F
• 12 hours of wetness required?– Reported to occur within 4‐6 hours
• Combined effects of duration of wetness & temperature not fully understood.
Pecan Scan
• Rain frequency is more important than total rainfall.
• Heavy rain at any time of day favors scab.• Light evening rain that keeps trees wet all night lead to more scab than rainfall ending early enough to allow trees to dry.
Pecan Scab Symptoms
On current‐season twigs• Infected in the rapid growth stage• Lesions are elongated• Dieback is uncommon except in
very susceptible cultivars• Will serve as inoculum source in following years
Pecan Scab Symptoms
On immature, expanding leaves• black spots (1‐5 mm)• appear velvety or rough when sporulating
• More common on lower surface• Upper & lower lesions do not always match.
Pecan Scab Symptoms • Leaves are most susceptible7 – 21 days after bud break
• New leaves & shoot elongationfor ~ 90 days
• March – April – May
Leaf Scab Damage
• Reduced photosynthesis• Leaf retention in the fall
• Source of inoculum
Pecan Scab Symptoms
On shucks• lesions are circular (2‐8 mm)• Once the shell hardens, subsequent infection is apparentlymore cosmetic then damaging.
Nut Growth & Damage Potential
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E-MAY M-MAY E-JUNE M-JUNE E-JULY M-JULY E-AUG M-AUG E-SEPT
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DAMAGE
POT.
Pecan Scab Symptoms
• Early infections– tremendous yield and crop quality reductions
• Late infections– less damaging to bothyield and quality.
• Critical period = early June ‐mid August
Pecan Scab Symptoms
Pecan Scab Symptoms SPRAYED
UNSPRAYED
Pecan Disease Management
Pecan Disease Management
• Resistant Cultivars– Scab has multiple races– Most economical and practical measure– Host resistance is not always durable– Cultivar recommendations are available.
Pecan Disease Management
• Cultural considerations– Plant more resistant cultivars– Increase cultivar diversity– Improve air flow
• Spacing• Thinning• Pruning
– Maintain tree health
Pecan Disease Management• Fungicide Applications – producing trees
– Bud break (early April) through shell hardening (mid August)
– 7 to 11 sprays possible (15‐20 not uncommon)– Air blast sprayers– Coverage will become the biggest challenge.
• Tree size• Tree spacing• Sprayer operation
Pecan Disease Management• Fungicide Applications – young trees
– Benefits from air movement & sunlight– Fewer fungicide applications– Shorter protection window
• Protect leaves & new growth
AU Pecan Spray Advisory
• This service is provided to pecan growers by Dr. Tim Brenneman, Dept of Plant Pathology at the University of Georgia and AWIS Weather Services.
• www.awis.com– Tab for “Pecan Weather”
Fungicide class
FRACgroup
Common name Trade name(s) Resistance
risk
MBCs(benzimidazoles)
1 thiophanate‐methyl
Topsin M; T‐methyl high
QoIs(strobilurins)
11
azoxystrobin pyraclostrobinkresoxim‐methyl trifloxystrobin
Abound, Quadris Top*, Quilt*Headline; Pristine***SovranAbsolute*, Adamant*
high
DMIs(sterol inhibitors, triazoles)
3
propiconazole fenbuconazolemetconazole difenoconazoletebuconazole
Orbit, Propimax, Bumper, Tilt Quilt*EnableQuashQuadris Top*Folicur, Tebuzol, Absolute*, Adamant*, Topsin XTR**
medium
Organotins 30 fentin hydroxide SuperTin, Agri Tin low to medium
Guanidines U12 dodine Elast (Syllit) low to medium
Phosphonates(phosphites) 33 phosphorous
acid and salts
Phostrol, ProPhyt, FungiPhite, Reliant, Fosphite, Kphite, Phiticide, Rampart, Topaz, Viathon****
low
* Formulated mixture of a DMI and a QoI *** Formulated mixture of an SDHI and a QoI** Formulated mixture of a DMI and an MBC **** Formulated mixture of a DMI and phosphite
1‐3 years
≥ 10 years
Pecan Disease Management
• Fungicide Resistance Risk– Fungicide mode of action (FRAC group)
• All fungicides have SOME risk• Some have higher risk based on MOA
– Fungicide use• Cumulative amount of fungicide with the sample MOA• Rate of fungicide used
Pecan Disease Management
• Fungicide Resistance Management– Use formulated mixtures or tank mixes– Alternate different MOA– Maintain effective rates– Use low‐risk fungicides when possible– Use when most effective
Fungicide class
FRACgroup
Common name Trade name(s) Resistance
risk
MBCs(benzimidazoles)
1 thiophanate‐methyl
Use sparingly; strict limitations
QoIs(strobilurins)
11
azoxystrobin pyraclostrobinkresoxim‐methyl trifloxystrobin
Best suited for foliar diseasesEffective for diseases other than scabCombinations of 11 + 3 also excellent on nut scabLimitations on number of usesDMIs
(sterol inhibitors, triazoles)
3
propiconazole fenbuconazolemetconazole difenoconazoletebuconazole
Organotins 30 fentin hydroxideBest suited for nut scab
Guanidines U12 dodine
Phosphonates(phosphites) 33 phosphorous
acid and salts3‐4 applications; every other spray, starting on Apr/May
* Formulated mixture of a DMI and a QoI *** Formulated mixture of an SDHI and a QoI** Formulated mixture of a DMI and an MBC **** Formulated mixture of a DMI and phosphite
Pesticide Labels
• Label = information printed on or attached to the container
Pesticide Labels
• To the manufacturer, the label is a "license to sell."• To the state or federal government, the label is a way to control the distribution, storage, sale, use, and disposal of the product.
• To the buyer or user, the label is a source of facts on how to use the product correctly and legally.
• To physicians, the label is a source of identification and information or proper treatment for poisoning cases.
Pesticide Labels• Identifying information
–pesticide’s classification, names, contents, signal words, manufacturer’s name and address, and the EPA registration ….
• Precautionary statements–environmental and other hazards, PPE, first aid treatments, …
Pesticide Labels• Directions for use
–Where, how, when, ….
• Storage and disposal
Pesticide Labels
• The label is the law!• Read before
–Buying–Mixing & applying– Storing–Disposing
Take Home Messages
• Cultivar selections
• Scab is the major concern.
• Fungicide classes and resistance management